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  197. <h1>
  198. HDFS User Guide
  199. </h1>
  200. <div id="minitoc-area">
  201. <ul class="minitoc">
  202. <li>
  203. <a href="#Purpose">Purpose</a>
  204. </li>
  205. <li>
  206. <a href="#Overview"> Overview </a>
  207. </li>
  208. <li>
  209. <a href="#Pre-requisites"> Pre-requisites </a>
  210. </li>
  211. <li>
  212. <a href="#Web+Interface"> Web Interface </a>
  213. </li>
  214. <li>
  215. <a href="#Shell+Commands">Shell Commands</a>
  216. <ul class="minitoc">
  217. <li>
  218. <a href="#DFSAdmin+Command"> DFSAdmin Command </a>
  219. </li>
  220. </ul>
  221. </li>
  222. <li>
  223. <a href="#Secondary+NameNode"> Secondary NameNode </a>
  224. </li>
  225. <li>
  226. <a href="#Rebalancer"> Rebalancer </a>
  227. </li>
  228. <li>
  229. <a href="#Rack+Awareness"> Rack Awareness </a>
  230. </li>
  231. <li>
  232. <a href="#Safemode"> Safemode </a>
  233. </li>
  234. <li>
  235. <a href="#fsck"> fsck </a>
  236. </li>
  237. <li>
  238. <a href="#Upgrade+and+Rollback"> Upgrade and Rollback </a>
  239. </li>
  240. <li>
  241. <a href="#File+Permissions+and+Security"> File Permissions and Security </a>
  242. </li>
  243. <li>
  244. <a href="#Scalability"> Scalability </a>
  245. </li>
  246. <li>
  247. <a href="#Related+Documentation"> Related Documentation </a>
  248. </li>
  249. </ul>
  250. </div>
  251. <a name="N1000D"></a><a name="Purpose"></a>
  252. <h2 class="h3">Purpose</h2>
  253. <div class="section">
  254. <p>
  255. This document is a starting point for users working with
  256. Hadoop Distributed File System (HDFS) either as a part of a
  257. <a href="http://hadoop.apache.org/">Hadoop</a>
  258. cluster or as a stand-alone general purpose distributed file system.
  259. While HDFS is designed to "just work" in many environments, a working
  260. knowledge of HDFS helps greatly with configuration improvements and
  261. diagnostics on a specific cluster.
  262. </p>
  263. </div>
  264. <a name="N1001B"></a><a name="Overview"></a>
  265. <h2 class="h3"> Overview </h2>
  266. <div class="section">
  267. <p>
  268. HDFS is the primary distributed storage used by Hadoop applications. A
  269. HDFS cluster primarily consists of a NameNode that manages the
  270. file system metadata and DataNodes that store the actual data. The
  271. architecture of HDFS is described in detail
  272. <a href="hdfs_design.html">here</a>. This user guide primarily deals with
  273. interaction of users and administrators with HDFS clusters.
  274. The <a href="images/hdfsarchitecture.gif">diagram</a> from
  275. <a href="hdfs_design.html">HDFS architecture</a> depicts
  276. basic interactions among NameNode, the DataNodes, and the clients.
  277. Clients contact NameNode for file metadata or file modifications and perform
  278. actual file I/O directly with the DataNodes.
  279. </p>
  280. <p>
  281. The following are some of the salient features that could be of
  282. interest to many users.
  283. </p>
  284. <ul>
  285. <li>
  286. Hadoop, including HDFS, is well suited for distributed storage
  287. and distributed processing using commodity hardware. It is fault
  288. tolerant, scalable, and extremely simple to expand.
  289. <a href="mapred_tutorial.html">Map-Reduce</a>,
  290. well known for its simplicity and applicability for large set of
  291. distributed applications, is an integral part of Hadoop.
  292. </li>
  293. <li>
  294. HDFS is highly configurable with a default configuration well
  295. suited for many installations. Most of the time, configuration
  296. needs to be tuned only for very large clusters.
  297. </li>
  298. <li>
  299. Hadoop is written in Java and is supported on all major platforms.
  300. </li>
  301. <li>
  302. Hadoop supports shell-like commands to interact with HDFS directly.
  303. </li>
  304. <li>
  305. The NameNode and Datanodes have built in web servers that makes it
  306. easy to check current status of the cluster.
  307. </li>
  308. <li>
  309. New features and improvements are regularly implemented in HDFS.
  310. The following is a subset of useful features in HDFS:
  311. <ul>
  312. <li>
  313. File permissions and authentication.
  314. </li>
  315. <li>
  316. <em>Rack awareness</em>: to take a node's physical location into
  317. account while scheduling tasks and allocating storage.
  318. </li>
  319. <li>
  320. Safemode: an administrative mode for maintenance.
  321. </li>
  322. <li>
  323. <span class="codefrag">fsck</span>: a utility to diagnose health of the file system, to
  324. find missing files or blocks.
  325. </li>
  326. <li>
  327. Rebalancer: tool to balance the cluster when the data is
  328. unevenly distributed among DataNodes.
  329. </li>
  330. <li>
  331. Upgrade and rollback: after a software upgrade,
  332. it is possible to
  333. rollback to HDFS' state before the upgrade in case of unexpected
  334. problems.
  335. </li>
  336. <li>
  337. Secondary NameNode: performs periodic checkpoints of the
  338. namespace and helps keep the size of file containing log of HDFS
  339. modifications within certain limits at the NameNode.
  340. </li>
  341. </ul>
  342. </li>
  343. </ul>
  344. </div>
  345. <a name="N1006B"></a><a name="Pre-requisites"></a>
  346. <h2 class="h3"> Pre-requisites </h2>
  347. <div class="section">
  348. <p>
  349. The following documents describe installation and set up of a
  350. Hadoop cluster :
  351. </p>
  352. <ul>
  353. <li>
  354. <a href="quickstart.html">Hadoop Quick Start</a>
  355. for first-time users.
  356. </li>
  357. <li>
  358. <a href="cluster_setup.html">Hadoop Cluster Setup</a>
  359. for large, distributed clusters.
  360. </li>
  361. </ul>
  362. <p>
  363. The rest of this document assumes the user is able to set up and run a
  364. HDFS with at least one DataNode. For the purpose of this document,
  365. both the NameNode and DataNode could be running on the same physical
  366. machine.
  367. </p>
  368. </div>
  369. <a name="N10089"></a><a name="Web+Interface"></a>
  370. <h2 class="h3"> Web Interface </h2>
  371. <div class="section">
  372. <p>
  373. NameNode and DataNode each run an internal web server in order to
  374. display basic information about the current status of the cluster.
  375. With the default configuration, the NameNode front page is at
  376. <span class="codefrag">http://namenode-name:50070/</span>.
  377. It lists the DataNodes in the cluster and basic statistics of the
  378. cluster. The web interface can also be used to browse the file
  379. system (using "Browse the file system" link on the NameNode front
  380. page).
  381. </p>
  382. </div>
  383. <a name="N10096"></a><a name="Shell+Commands"></a>
  384. <h2 class="h3">Shell Commands</h2>
  385. <div class="section">
  386. <p>
  387. Hadoop includes various shell-like commands that directly
  388. interact with HDFS and other file systems that Hadoop supports.
  389. The command
  390. <span class="codefrag">bin/hadoop fs -help</span>
  391. lists the commands supported by Hadoop
  392. shell. Furthermore, the command
  393. <span class="codefrag">bin/hadoop fs -help command-name</span>
  394. displays more detailed help for a command. These commands support
  395. most of the normal files ystem operations like copying files,
  396. changing file permissions, etc. It also supports a few HDFS
  397. specific operations like changing replication of files.
  398. </p>
  399. <a name="N100A5"></a><a name="DFSAdmin+Command"></a>
  400. <h3 class="h4"> DFSAdmin Command </h3>
  401. <p>
  402. The <span class="codefrag">bin/hadoop dfsadmin</span>
  403. command supports a few HDFS administration related operations.
  404. The <span class="codefrag">bin/hadoop dfsadmin -help</span> command
  405. lists all the commands currently supported. For e.g.:
  406. </p>
  407. <ul>
  408. <li>
  409. <span class="codefrag">-report</span>
  410. : reports basic statistics of HDFS. Some of this information is
  411. also available on the NameNode front page.
  412. </li>
  413. <li>
  414. <span class="codefrag">-safemode</span>
  415. : though usually not required, an administrator can manually enter
  416. or leave Safemode.
  417. </li>
  418. <li>
  419. <span class="codefrag">-finalizeUpgrade</span>
  420. : removes previous backup of the cluster made during last upgrade.
  421. </li>
  422. <li>
  423. <span class="codefrag">-refreshNodes</span>
  424. : Updates the set of hosts allowed to connect to namenode.
  425. Re-reads the config file to update values defined by dfs.hosts and
  426. dfs.host.exclude and reads the entires (hostnames) in those files.
  427. Each entry not defined in dfs.hosts but in dfs.hosts.exclude
  428. is decommissioned. Each entry defined in dfs.hosts and also in
  429. dfs.host.exclude is stopped from decommissioning if it has aleady
  430. been marked for decommission. Entires not present in both the lists
  431. are decommissioned.
  432. </li>
  433. </ul>
  434. <p>
  435. For command usage, see <a href="commands_manual.html#dfsadmin">dfsadmin command</a>.
  436. </p>
  437. </div>
  438. <a name="N100D8"></a><a name="Secondary+NameNode"></a>
  439. <h2 class="h3"> Secondary NameNode </h2>
  440. <div class="section">
  441. <p>
  442. The NameNode stores modifications to the file system as a log
  443. appended to a native file system file (<span class="codefrag">edits</span>).
  444. When a NameNode starts up, it reads HDFS state from an image
  445. file (<span class="codefrag">fsimage</span>) and then applies edits from the
  446. edits log file. It then writes new HDFS state to the <span class="codefrag">fsimage</span>
  447. and starts normal
  448. operation with an empty edits file. Since NameNode merges
  449. <span class="codefrag">fsimage</span> and <span class="codefrag">edits</span> files only during start up,
  450. the edits log file could get very large over time on a busy cluster.
  451. Another side effect of a larger edits file is that next
  452. restart of NameNode takes longer.
  453. </p>
  454. <p>
  455. The secondary NameNode merges the fsimage and the edits log files periodically
  456. and keeps edits log size within a limit. It is usually run on a
  457. different machine than the primary NameNode since its memory requirements
  458. are on the same order as the primary NameNode. The secondary
  459. NameNode is started by <span class="codefrag">bin/start-dfs.sh</span> on the nodes
  460. specified in <span class="codefrag">conf/masters</span> file.
  461. </p>
  462. <p>
  463. The start of the checkpoint process on the secondary NameNode is
  464. controlled by two configuration parameters.
  465. </p>
  466. <ul>
  467. <li>
  468. <span class="codefrag">fs.checkpoint.period</span>, set to 1 hour by default, specifies
  469. the maximum delay between two consecutive checkpoints, and
  470. </li>
  471. <li>
  472. <span class="codefrag">fs.checkpoint.size</span>, set to 64MB by default, defines the
  473. size of the edits log file that forces an urgent checkpoint even if
  474. the maximum checkpoint delay is not reached.
  475. </li>
  476. </ul>
  477. <p>
  478. The secondary NameNode stores the latest checkpoint in a
  479. directory which is structured the same way as the primary NameNode's
  480. directory. So that the check pointed image is always ready to be
  481. read by the primary NameNode if necessary.
  482. </p>
  483. <p>
  484. The latest checkpoint can be imported to the primary NameNode if
  485. all other copies of the image and the edits files are lost.
  486. In order to do that one should:
  487. </p>
  488. <ul>
  489. <li>
  490. Create an empty directory specified in the
  491. <span class="codefrag">dfs.name.dir</span> configuration variable;
  492. </li>
  493. <li>
  494. Specify the location of the checkpoint directory in the
  495. configuration variable <span class="codefrag">fs.checkpoint.dir</span>;
  496. </li>
  497. <li>
  498. and start the NameNode with <span class="codefrag">-importCheckpoint</span> option.
  499. </li>
  500. </ul>
  501. <p>
  502. The NameNode will upload the checkpoint from the
  503. <span class="codefrag">fs.checkpoint.dir</span> directory and then save it to the NameNode
  504. directory(s) set in <span class="codefrag">dfs.name.dir</span>.
  505. The NameNode will fail if a legal image is contained in
  506. <span class="codefrag">dfs.name.dir</span>.
  507. The NameNode verifies that the image in <span class="codefrag">fs.checkpoint.dir</span> is
  508. consistent, but does not modify it in any way.
  509. </p>
  510. <p>
  511. For command usage, see <a href="commands_manual.html#secondarynamenode"><span class="codefrag">secondarynamenode</span> command</a>.
  512. </p>
  513. </div>
  514. <a name="N1013F"></a><a name="Rebalancer"></a>
  515. <h2 class="h3"> Rebalancer </h2>
  516. <div class="section">
  517. <p>
  518. HDFS data might not always be be placed uniformly across the
  519. DataNode. One common reason is addition of new DataNodes to an
  520. existing cluster. While placing new blocks (data for a file is
  521. stored as a series of blocks), NameNode considers various
  522. parameters before choosing the DataNodes to receive these blocks.
  523. Some of the considerations are:
  524. </p>
  525. <ul>
  526. <li>
  527. Policy to keep one of the replicas of a block on the same node
  528. as the node that is writing the block.
  529. </li>
  530. <li>
  531. Need to spread different replicas of a block across the racks so
  532. that cluster can survive loss of whole rack.
  533. </li>
  534. <li>
  535. One of the replicas is usually placed on the same rack as the
  536. node writing to the file so that cross-rack network I/O is
  537. reduced.
  538. </li>
  539. <li>
  540. Spread HDFS data uniformly across the DataNodes in the cluster.
  541. </li>
  542. </ul>
  543. <p>
  544. Due to multiple competing considerations, data might not be
  545. uniformly placed across the DataNodes.
  546. HDFS provides a tool for administrators that analyzes block
  547. placement and rebalanaces data across the DataNode. A brief
  548. administrator's guide for rebalancer as a
  549. <a href="http://issues.apache.org/jira/secure/attachment/12368261/RebalanceDesign6.pdf">PDF</a>
  550. is attached to
  551. <a href="http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-1652">HADOOP-1652</a>.
  552. </p>
  553. <p>
  554. For command usage, see <a href="commands_manual.html#balancer">balancer command</a>.
  555. </p>
  556. </div>
  557. <a name="N1016A"></a><a name="Rack+Awareness"></a>
  558. <h2 class="h3"> Rack Awareness </h2>
  559. <div class="section">
  560. <p>
  561. Typically large Hadoop clusters are arranged in racks and
  562. network traffic between different nodes with in the same rack is
  563. much more desirable than network traffic across the racks. In
  564. addition NameNode tries to place replicas of block on
  565. multiple racks for improved fault tolerance. Hadoop lets the
  566. cluster administrators decide which rack a node belongs to
  567. through configuration variable <span class="codefrag">dfs.network.script</span>. When this
  568. script is configured, each node runs the script to determine its
  569. rack id. A default installation assumes all the nodes belong to
  570. the same rack. This feature and configuration is further described
  571. in <a href="http://issues.apache.org/jira/secure/attachment/12345251/Rack_aware_HDFS_proposal.pdf">PDF</a>
  572. attached to
  573. <a href="http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-692">HADOOP-692</a>.
  574. </p>
  575. </div>
  576. <a name="N1017F"></a><a name="Safemode"></a>
  577. <h2 class="h3"> Safemode </h2>
  578. <div class="section">
  579. <p>
  580. During start up the NameNode loads the file system state from the
  581. fsimage and the edits log file. It then waits for DataNodes
  582. to report their blocks so that it does not prematurely start
  583. replicating the blocks though enough replicas already exist in the
  584. cluster. During this time NameNode stays in Safemode.
  585. Safemode
  586. for the NameNode is essentially a read-only mode for the HDFS cluster,
  587. where it does not allow any modifications to file system or blocks.
  588. Normally the NameNode leaves Safemode automatically after the DataNodes
  589. have reported that most file system blocks are available.
  590. If required, HDFS could be placed in Safemode explicitly
  591. using <span class="codefrag">'bin/hadoop dfsadmin -safemode'</span> command. NameNode front
  592. page shows whether Safemode is on or off. A more detailed
  593. description and configuration is maintained as JavaDoc for
  594. <a href="http://hadoop.apache.org/core/docs/current/api/org/apache/hadoop/dfs/NameNode.html#setSafeMode(org.apache.hadoop.dfs.FSConstants.SafeModeAction)"><span class="codefrag">setSafeMode()</span></a>.
  595. </p>
  596. </div>
  597. <a name="N10191"></a><a name="fsck"></a>
  598. <h2 class="h3"> fsck </h2>
  599. <div class="section">
  600. <p>
  601. HDFS supports the <span class="codefrag">fsck</span> command to check for various
  602. inconsistencies.
  603. It it is designed for reporting problems with various
  604. files, for example, missing blocks for a file or under-replicated
  605. blocks. Unlike a traditional <span class="codefrag">fsck</span> utility for native file systems,
  606. this command does not correct the errors it detects. Normally NameNode
  607. automatically corrects most of the recoverable failures. By default
  608. <span class="codefrag">fsck</span> ignores open files but provides an option to select all files during reporting.
  609. The HDFS <span class="codefrag">fsck</span> command is not a
  610. Hadoop shell command. It can be run as '<span class="codefrag">bin/hadoop fsck</span>'.
  611. For command usage, see <a href="commands_manual.html#fsck"><span class="codefrag">fsck</span> command</a>.
  612. <span class="codefrag">fsck</span> can be run on the whole file system or on a subset of files.
  613. </p>
  614. </div>
  615. <a name="N101B3"></a><a name="Upgrade+and+Rollback"></a>
  616. <h2 class="h3"> Upgrade and Rollback </h2>
  617. <div class="section">
  618. <p>
  619. When Hadoop is upgraded on an existing cluster, as with any
  620. software upgrade, it is possible there are new bugs or
  621. incompatible changes that affect existing applications and were
  622. not discovered earlier. In any non-trivial HDFS installation, it
  623. is not an option to loose any data, let alone to restart HDFS from
  624. scratch. HDFS allows administrators to go back to earlier version
  625. of Hadoop and rollback the cluster to the state it was in
  626. before
  627. the upgrade. HDFS upgrade is described in more detail in
  628. <a href="http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/Hadoop%20Upgrade">upgrade wiki</a>.
  629. HDFS can have one such backup at a time. Before upgrading,
  630. administrators need to remove existing backup using <span class="codefrag">bin/hadoop
  631. dfsadmin -finalizeUpgrade</span> command. The following
  632. briefly describes the typical upgrade procedure:
  633. </p>
  634. <ul>
  635. <li>
  636. Before upgrading Hadoop software,
  637. <em>finalize</em> if there an existing backup.
  638. <span class="codefrag">dfsadmin -upgradeProgress status</span>
  639. can tell if the cluster needs to be <em>finalized</em>.
  640. </li>
  641. <li>Stop the cluster and distribute new version of Hadoop.</li>
  642. <li>
  643. Run the new version with <span class="codefrag">-upgrade</span> option
  644. (<span class="codefrag">bin/start-dfs.sh -upgrade</span>).
  645. </li>
  646. <li>
  647. Most of the time, cluster works just fine. Once the new HDFS is
  648. considered working well (may be after a few days of operation),
  649. finalize the upgrade. Note that until the cluster is finalized,
  650. deleting the files that existed before the upgrade does not free
  651. up real disk space on the DataNodes.
  652. </li>
  653. <li>
  654. If there is a need to move back to the old version,
  655. <ul>
  656. <li> stop the cluster and distribute earlier version of Hadoop. </li>
  657. <li> start the cluster with rollback option.
  658. (<span class="codefrag">bin/start-dfs.h -rollback</span>).
  659. </li>
  660. </ul>
  661. </li>
  662. </ul>
  663. </div>
  664. <a name="N101F1"></a><a name="File+Permissions+and+Security"></a>
  665. <h2 class="h3"> File Permissions and Security </h2>
  666. <div class="section">
  667. <p>
  668. The file permissions are designed to be similar to file permissions on
  669. other familiar platforms like Linux. Currently, security is limited
  670. to simple file permissions. The user that starts NameNode is
  671. treated as the superuser for HDFS. Future versions of HDFS will
  672. support network authentication protocols like Kerberos for user
  673. authentication and encryption of data transfers. The details are discussed in the
  674. <a href="hdfs_permissions_guide.html">Permissions User and Administrator Guide</a>.
  675. </p>
  676. </div>
  677. <a name="N101FF"></a><a name="Scalability"></a>
  678. <h2 class="h3"> Scalability </h2>
  679. <div class="section">
  680. <p>
  681. Hadoop currently runs on clusters with thousands of nodes.
  682. <a href="http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/PoweredBy">Powered By Hadoop</a>
  683. lists some of the organizations that deploy Hadoop on large
  684. clusters. HDFS has one NameNode for each cluster. Currently
  685. the total memory available on NameNode is the primary scalability
  686. limitation. On very large clusters, increasing average size of
  687. files stored in HDFS helps with increasing cluster size without
  688. increasing memory requirements on NameNode.
  689. The default configuration may not suite very large clustes.
  690. <a href="http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/FAQ">Hadoop FAQ</a> page lists
  691. suggested configuration improvements for large Hadoop clusters.
  692. </p>
  693. </div>
  694. <a name="N10211"></a><a name="Related+Documentation"></a>
  695. <h2 class="h3"> Related Documentation </h2>
  696. <div class="section">
  697. <p>
  698. This user guide is a good starting point for
  699. working with HDFS. While the user guide continues to improve,
  700. there is a large wealth of documentation about Hadoop and HDFS.
  701. The following list is a starting point for further exploration:
  702. </p>
  703. <ul>
  704. <li>
  705. <a href="http://hadoop.apache.org/">Hadoop Home Page</a>: The start page for everything Hadoop.
  706. </li>
  707. <li>
  708. <a href="http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/FrontPage">Hadoop Wiki</a>
  709. : Front page for Hadoop Wiki documentation. Unlike this
  710. guide which is part of Hadoop source tree, Hadoop Wiki is
  711. regularly edited by Hadoop Community.
  712. </li>
  713. <li>
  714. <a href="http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/FAQ">FAQ</a> from Hadoop Wiki.
  715. </li>
  716. <li>
  717. Hadoop <a href="http://hadoop.apache.org/core/docs/current/api/">
  718. JavaDoc API</a>.
  719. </li>
  720. <li>
  721. Hadoop User Mailing List :
  722. <a href="mailto:core-user@hadoop.apache.org">core-user[at]hadoop.apache.org</a>.
  723. </li>
  724. <li>
  725. Explore <span class="codefrag">conf/hadoop-default.xml</span>.
  726. It includes brief
  727. description of most of the configuration variables available.
  728. </li>
  729. <li>
  730. <a href="commands_manual.html">Commands Manual</a>
  731. : commands usage.
  732. </li>
  733. </ul>
  734. </div>
  735. </div>
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  752. 2008 <a href="http://www.apache.org/licenses/">The Apache Software Foundation.</a>
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